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Is Corporate Social Responsibility Ethical? - Recognizing Ethical Issues In Business, Spoorthi A. S. Mba, Chethan M. Kumar Jan 2020

Is Corporate Social Responsibility Ethical? - Recognizing Ethical Issues In Business, Spoorthi A. S. Mba, Chethan M. Kumar

International Review of Business and Economics

Corporate Social Responsibility is all about companies playing their responsible part in society and giving back to society and a big part of that is fund raising for valuable cause. Companies engage in Corporate Social Responsibility when they grant benefits to the communities where they work which are neither required by law nor an integral part of their primary objective is profit oriented company. Today, however businesses must also reflect on the legal, ethical, moral and social consequences of their decisions. The purpose of working on this paper is to identify the ethical issues faced by the organization and how …


Sharing Information Benefits The Meat Industry, Michael Paton Jan 1995

Sharing Information Benefits The Meat Industry, Michael Paton

Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4

Cronic health problems of livestock, seldom detected on farms, reduce the efficiency of abattoirs and returns to producers. But a major project providing information to producers from abattoirs is indicating how everyone could benefit from feedback.


Accreditation: Implications For Hospitality Management Education, Mary L. Tanke Jan 1986

Accreditation: Implications For Hospitality Management Education, Mary L. Tanke

Hospitality Review

Accreditation was previously defined as a voluntary process in which recognition is granted to educational programs which meet or exceed established standards of educational quality. One of the inherent problems in the application of the accreditation process lies in the identification of educational quality, an elusive and subjective concept which creates the fear of the accreditation process becoming equally subjective. The author discusses this fear, along with other misconceptions regarding the implementation of accreditation in hospitality management programs at the baccalaureate level, concluding a two-part series begun in the Spring 1985 issue.


Accreditation: What It Is … And Is Not, Mary L. Tanke Jan 1985

Accreditation: What It Is … And Is Not, Mary L. Tanke

Hospitality Review

The conceptual notion of accreditation is as specialized, complex, and diverse as is the field of hospitality management education. Before an argument can be made for or against accreditation within the professional field of hospitality management, a common understanding of accreditation must be achieved. The following article, the first of a two-part series, is intended to expand the reader's knowledge of the accreditation process. Part two will discuss its relationship to hospitality management education at the college or university level.